Psychoanalysis and the Humanities

Front Cover
Laurie Adams, Jacques Szaluta
Psychology Press, 1996 - Education - 168 pages
First published in 1996. Written by distinguished artists and scholars with psychoanalytic training, this seminal collection of essays spans the humanities-painting, sculpture, literature, history, anthropology, and philosophy-illustrating how psychoanalytic thinking can power-fully enhance these disciplines. The essayists address a question first posed by Freud in his 1919 article, Should Psychoanalysis Be Taught at the University? With a resounding Yes, they underline the intellectual enrichment to be gained from the application of the psychoanalytic method to humanistic disciplines and, conversely, the need for contemporary psy-choanalysts to acquire the kind of historical and classical education taken for granted by their counterparts earlier in this century.

From inside the book

Contents

The Large Bathers II
29
A Monument
76
Writing the Unconscious
97
Bridging Science
119
Psychoanalysis and History
149
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

References to this book

Bibliographic information